Es Vedra Sightseeing Cruise, Wednesdays

We would like to invite you for a three hours cruise on our glass bottom boat round the west coast of San Antonio goig to the island of Es Vedrá. During the trip you will be able to see the bays of Cala Bassa, Cala Conta, Cala Molí, Cala Vadella, Cala Carbó and Cala D'Hort and Es Vedrá. We have bar service and WC on board. Also during the trip we'll invite you to champagne. Don't forget your camera.

Please met us at the Captain Nemo Kiosk in the Harbour of San Antonio at 2:30 pm, hand out this voucher to the staff

Es Vedrá is the number 1 site you have to see " TRIPADVISOR "

The island is said to be home to sirens and sea-nymphs, who tried to lure Odysseus from his ship in Homer’s Odyssey. It is also thought of as the holy island of the Tanit the Phoenician lunar goddess, worshiped as the patron goddess and of fertility, who became Ibiza’s patroness. Legend has it that specific sacrifices were made to Tanit during full moons on the shore of the island.

The Giant of Es VedràEs Vedrà is also the setting for one of Ibiza’s popular fables (Rondalles). Es Gegant des Vedrà (The Giant of Es Vedrà) is the tale about two brothers who, to cure their father of an incurable illness, had to go to Es Vedrà island to gather rock samphire and face the huge giant who lived on the island, huddled in one of the island's many caves. The two brothers’ ingenuity, along with the help of sea urchins, managed to debilitate the giant, and thus collect the samphire for the cure.

UFOsMany people have claimed to have seen UFOs around the island and some believe that there is a secret UFO base under the sea here, and that Es Vedrà is their gateway or navigation beacon. One such sighting is famously known as Caso Manises. On November 11, 1979 a commercial flight between Mallorca and Tenerife was redirected to make an emergency landing in Valencia. The pilot reported a strange rapid moving light accosting his aircraft close to the island of Es Vedrà. He sent out an SOS signal and as the air traffic controller was unable to identify the object he was urged to change his flight path.

Francis Palau y QuerThe Carmelite friar Francis Palau y Quer arrived on Ibiza following his exile from Barcelona in 1855. Needing solitude, he used to retire to Es Vedrà by rowing a boat,[5] to pray there and seek God's will. Legend says that he spent a week meditating surviving on nothing but rainwater he collected from drips from the roof of a cave he used for shelter. Within hours, he began to witness a series of powerful visions. He later described them in a book, called My Relations With the church